Too soft to move the strong lilies.
Touches the wisteria’s new lavender blooms,
Clustered like graceful fingers
Pointing down at the sacred ground.
A dove in silence feeds on scattered seeds
As the air’s light currents
Suddenly gust through the deep green rose leaves
And up to the eucalyptus’ tangled top.
My spirit stops there;
Then, as the dove lifts up
On the wind-breath,
My heart flies with her wings.
April is a glorious month, filled with every kind of bird and flower, with clean green breezes and gentle rain. We welcome with joy the powerful creativity of this energetic month. April is spring at her very best. It is not surprising that some of the world’s most significant spiritual celebrations of rebirth and renewal take place at this regenerative time. This year, Easter and Passover both fall in April. And in Japan, the Birth of the Buddha is always celebrated in April.
As my Easter gift to you this year, I offer a profoundly symbolic recipe from our website: Danish Pastry Easter Wreath. With an Easter Egg in its center and colorful little chocolate eggs surrounding it, this round pastry symbolizes the eternal circle of life, new birth, and resurrection through the use of yeast dough, which miraculously rises from a flat pile of flour.This recipe appears on our website in our Christmas Tea menu as an edible Christmas wreath, celebrating the birth of a child, and in nature the rebirth of light over darkness and warmth over cold as the depth of winter promises to give way to the radiance of spring.
Do not be intimidated by the length and apparent complexity of this recipe. Unlike my co-author and niece Kathleen, I am not an expert at yeast baking, but I have made this Danish Pastry Wreath numerous times over the years for Christmas and Easter without a single failure. I found the recipe in the excellent and reliable McCall’s Bake-It Book, copyrighted from 1971-1975.
I adapted the very clear instructions in the McCall’s recipe into a fourteen-step format that is very easy to follow. Your only challenge is to set aside an entire day (or two half days) for this project. I find that my time in the kitchen is happiest , especially when making a time-consuming recipe, when I am completely alone and have no further appointments scheduled for the day. As you create the dough, braid the wreath, set it aside for rising, bake and decorate this beautiful celebratory pastry, keep in mind that your hours of work are a gift of gratitude for those you love.
Danish Pastry Easter Wreath
For the dough:
- 1 ½ cups (3 sticks) butter, softened
- ¼ cup flour
- ¾ cup whole milk
- 1/3 cup sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ cup warm water (105-115 degrees F)
- 2 packages active dry yeast
- 1 large egg
- 3 ¾ cups flour
For the filling:
- 1 (8-ounce) can or package almond paste
- ¾ cup graham cracker crumbs
- ½ cup (1 stick) butter, melted
- 1 egg
- ½ teaspoon almond extract
For the icing and decorations:
- 2 cups powdered sugar
- 3-4 tablespoons milk
- ½ cup sliced toasted almonds (optional)
- 2 colored Easter eggs (to place in the center of each pastry)
- Small pastel chocolate Easter egg candies
- Colored sprinkles or sugar crystals (optional)
Special equipment:
Large mixing bowl, waxed paper, ruler, wooden spoon, cooking thermometer, glass measuring cup, pastry cloth, medium sized mixing bowl, rolling pin, aluminum foil, large sharp knife, fork, 2 large baking sheets, parchment paper, plastic wrap, large serving platter (about 12”) or cake pedestalMakes: 2 braided pastry wreaths, about 11” each, 8-12 servings each
- Bring butter and egg to room temperature. In a large bowl with a wooden spoon, beat the butter and ¼ cup flour until smooth. Spread on waxed paper on a wet surface to a 12” x 8” rectangle. Refrigerate on a cookie sheet.
- Heat ¾ cup milk slightly in the microwave in a glass measuring cup. Add sugar and salt and stir to dissolve. Cool to lukewarm.
- Check the temperature of the very warm water with a thermometer. It should be between 105 and 115° F. Pour the warm water into a large bowl, sprinkle the yeast over the water and stir to dissolve. Stir in the milk mixture, egg and 3 cups of flour. Beat with a wooden spoon until smooth. Mix in the rest of the flour by hand until the dough leaves the side of the bowl.
- Refrigerate, covered, for ½ hour. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured pastry cloth and roll into a 16 x 12” rectangle.
- Place the chilled butter mixture on half of the dough and remove the waxed paper. Fold the other half of the dough over the butter and pinch the edges to seal.
- With the fold at the right, roll the dough out from the center to a 16” x 8” rectangle. From the short side, fold the dough into thirds, making 3 layers. Seal the edges and chill for 1 hour.
- Repeat rolling and folding into thirds several times. (If butter breaks through, brush with flour.) Seal the edges and chill for ½ hour.
- Roll, fold again, and seal the edges. Chill the dough, wrapped in foil, for 3 hours or overnight. Cut the dough into 2 equal pieces. Wrap and chill one half. Roll the other half into a 22 x 8” strip. This will take some effort, as the dough is very cold and may need to be stretched by hand. Cut the rectangle of dough into thirds lengthwise.
- Melt the butter for the filling and mix all of the filling ingredients in a medium sized bowl with a wooden spoon. Use a fork also to make sure the almond paste is well incorporated into the filling. Fill the center of each strip of dough with 1/3 cup of filling, distributed evenly along the length of the strip. Closes the edges over the filling, pinching the edges together tightly so that no filling is visible.
- Place the 3 ropes of filled dough side by side, pinch the tops together, and loosely braid the ropes together, keeping the seams facing downward.
- Form the dough braid into a circular shaped wreath and place it on a parchment-lined cookie sheet. Seal the top and bottom sections to adhere and adjust the shape into a circle about 6” across in the center. Repeat the rolling, filling and braiding process with the second half of the dough, form the braid into a wreath, and place it on a second parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Place the wreaths in a warm place to rise until doubled, about 1 hour.
- Preheat the oven to 375° F. Bake the wreaths on the 2 cookie sheets for 25-30 minutes. If making ahead, cool on racks, and when completely cool, wrap carefully in plastic and aluminum foil and freeze. To serve, thaw completely while still wrapped, remove the plastic wrap and wrap loosely in foil. Place on cookie sheets and warm in a 350° F oven for 10 minutes. Remove the foil, place on a decorative platter or pedestal and follow the instructions in step 14.
- If serving immediately, mix the powdered sugar and milk and drizzle the glaze over the warm pastries. Scatter toasted sliced almonds over each wreath and place a colored Easter egg in the center. Decorate with colored sprinkles or sugar crystals if you wish, or place miniature pastel chocolate Easter Eggs around each wreath. Serve warm.